Together, the six authors in this anthology paint a diverse and multivocal portrait of gay male aging, gay history, and gay culture. Through a collection of poems, prose, and essays, these men examine and narrate the experience of being an “older” gay male in the new millenium. As members of Chicago’s gay community, the words of Allen Brown, Ralph Conrad, Randy Gresham, Joe Kenney, Tom Stabnicki and Dion Walton offer layered, heartbreaking, and humorous perspectives on the meaning of gay and gray in the year 2010. The collection is edited by Dustin Bradley Goltz, PhD, Assistant Professor at DePaul University, whose research explores the gay youth obsession and the discursive production of gay male future in contemporary popular culture. From activism and loss, to relationships and hope, this edited anthology works to both preserve and pass on their legacies to gay cultures of the present, of gay cultures now past, and for the ones that are yet to be.

The writers and artists, Allen Brown, Ralph Conrad, Randy Gresham, Joe Kenney, Tom Stabnicki and Dion Walton, each live in Chicago and are members of The Center on Halsted’s SAGE Program. Dustin Bradley Goltz, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Performance Studies and Rhetoric at DePaul University in Chicago, in The College of Communication.

This book was published though the support of DePaul University’s College of Communication.

"Belle Époque" Memories of quaint gay aunties, Piss-elegant grand old queens Young gay men being put at ease In wonderful bric-a-brac houses. Opera, show tunes, Piaf, Garland, Secured across generations Surrogates, mentors, manners, lovers, Devoted to art and drama. Navigating paths, exchanging masks – A gift of rainbow hues. The sublime gay guides of youth, now gone. Who is their legacy? by RANDY GRESHAM "What Got Lost" Snowy night, anxious horny buzzed, I taxied up LSD to the trick’s. I toyed with the clasp of the watch on the ride and the watch must have fallen off when I paid my fare or hurried off to party. I didn’t notice. I’ve lost two lovers, a home, my way, my watch. The watch was a gift from Dan. by TOM STABNICKI

The writers and artists, Allen Brown, Ralph Conrad, Randy Gresham, Joe Kenney, Tom Stabnicki and Dion Walton, each live in Chicago and are members of The Center on Halsted's SAGE Program. Dustin Bradley Goltz, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Performance Studies and Rhetoric at DePaul University in Chicago, in The College of Communication.

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